Embassy Row

Your Guide

The walk down Massachusetts Avenue between Dupont Circle and the National Cathedral will introduce you to the variety of neighborhoods that make up Embassy Row. Starting at Dupont Circle, the Embassy buildings vary in size and space to create an urban streetscape, then evolve into a uniform size and setback near Sheridan Circle and become more campus-like as one approaches the Naval Observatory. Walking through these neighborhoods gives a visual history of Washington building styles and the city’s development through the years.

Streetscape with Urban Edge

At Dupont Circle embassy buildings are interspersed with commercial and institutional buildings of varying size and scale both historic and contemporary. The tight street grid of this span of Embassy Row means many buildings showcase parking spaces more prominently than plantings. These Embassies tend to feel more approachable because of their scale and proximity to the street.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Sheridan Circle

Sheridan Circle feels like a ceremonial park that fits into L’Enfant’s vision for the city of Washington, even though it lies just outside the bounds of the original 1791 plan. At its center is a bronze statue of Civil War General Philip Sheridan, created by sculptor of Mount Rushmore, Gutzon Borglum. It is also hub that connects easily with the Dumbarton Bridge and identifies the point where Massachusetts Avenue changes direction to align with Rock Creek. The lack of accessible pedestrian routes, benches and trees, however, prevents this space from being as lively or as visited as Dupont Circle.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Crossing the Park

Crossing the bridge over Rock Creek allows one to appreciate some of the dramatic topography in Washington, D.C. Standing on the Massachusetts Avenue bridge, one can look down the forested ravine to see the flow of the creek, its trails and the Rock Creek Parkway. The bridge is also a transition point after which there is a more generous building setback, allowing for more interesting and lush gardens with a wider sidewalk.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Italian Embassy

Just off Massachusetts Avenue to the east on Whitehaven Boulevard lies the Modernist and eye-catching Italian Embassy. Keeping with the more suburban or campus-like quality of this section of Embassy Row, it has generous grounds of lush plantings, hidden below ground parking, tree-lined streets, wide sidewalks and typically more than one building in each compound. Despite its distance from the street, the Italian Embassy welcomes pedestrians to view its minimalist, manicured grounds through a glass railing.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Brazilian Embassy

The Brazilian Embassy is striking from afar due to its modern design and glass façade that reflects a mirror image of the nearby trees. Its proximity to the street welcomes visitors and its glass walls and door at the entry blur the lines between interior and exterior space.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Lindens along Embassy Row

A continuous line of dense-canopied linden trees defines the edge of Massachusetts Avenue’s western sidewalk between Rock Creek Park and Observatory Circle. The canopy cover provides a feeling of enclosure and protects pedestrians from the hot summer sun. The wider sidewalk in this section of Embassy Row has a park-like feeling that encourages walking at a leisurely pace.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

British Embassy

Showing finesse and sensitivity between landscape and buildings, the British Embassy is a beautiful period piece and the only work in the U.S. by the great Edwin Lutyens, one of my favorite early 20th century architects. The embassy addition completed in 1960 is an unusual example of mid-centuty Modern design with a humane touch often missing in work of that period. The recent construction of brick planters in the name of security is an unfortunate addition to an otherwise exquisite ensemble of buildings.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Kahlil Gibran Statue

Shrouded amidst canopy trees on the north side of Massachusetts Avenue, the memorial garden to Lebanese-American poet Kahlil Gibran offers a much different atmosphere than the memorials of the monumental core. Unlike those highly trafficked classical works, this is a solitary, contemplative space surrounded by forest with winding paths, benches and a bubbling fountain.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Finnish Embassy

The Finnish Embassy is worth visiting because it does not conform to the standards of embassy design in Washington, D.C. Built in 1994, it does the most to maximize its relationship to the site by revealing the forest through large glass exterior walls and reflecting the forest on the polished stone exterior. It’s most distinguishing features seen from the street are the screen of climbing vines and finishes of bronze patina.

Image: Michael Vergason Landscape Architects

Comments

Deborah ShapleyDecember 27, 2012 1:59 PM

Restore Mass Ave, is a 501 c 3 working since 2006 to restore the canopy of major trees that made this part of Mass Ave now known as Embassy Row, a world attraction a century ago. We've arranged for the addition of about 245 trees, from the city, Casey Trees, and other sources and get them ALL cared for. We hope visitors to these sidewalks will enjoy the emerging double rows, or allees of major trees, as they grow in years to come.
Volunteer or donate through our web site. Follow us on our blog http://blog.restoremassave.org